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Could see the return of Berlusconi?

Blog post by Senior Associate Roberto Robles, 27 June 2017

Sunday’s Italian municipal election results demonstrated one of the golden rules of Italian politics – never underestimate Il Cavaliere. Former Prime Minister ’s party and its ally, , had a string of very good results in some of Italy’s largest cities, with victory in the erstwhile left-wing stronghold of being the most symbolic.

To some extent, the centre-right’s success is due to the failure of its two rivals. The Five-Star Movement failed to make it into the run-off in any large city, compared to 2016 when it notably won and . In the second round, its voters mostly flocked to centre-right candidates, partly as a way to punish the governing centre-left. Italian voters are increasingly distinguishing between the local and national contexts, and while backing away from the at a local level – with the party’s perceived mismanagement of the city of Rome perhaps having served as a cautionary tale – they are still prepared to support it at a national level, with the party continuing to top most opinion polls. As with other populist parties in Western , this may be not because voters perceive the Five Star Movement as having answers, but because they think it is at least asking the right questions and see a vote for it as a way to put pressure on established political parties. While the centre-right has proved that it can be a winning alliance at the local level, combining Berlusconi’s Forza Italia and ’s Lega Nord would be much more difficult at a national level. The two parties differ significantly on key policy areas like membership – with

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Salvini advocating a full exit, while Berlusconi has recently touted the idea of a ‘parallel currency’ – that would not necessarily prevent a local alliance, but would prove problematic in government. But it’s also a question of personality and leadership. While historically Forza Italia has been clearly the senior party in centre-right coalitions, both parties are now hovering around 13-14% in the opinion polls. This poses the question of who would lead such a coalition, and not only do Salvini and Berlusconi have clashing personalities, they also have different visions for the right; for Salvini, one modelled after ’s Front National, and for Berlusconi, one closer to the mainstream European centre-right. These differences are unlikely to be surmounted before the next parliamentary elections in Spring 2018, relegating one of the right-wing parties to supporting a centre-left government or even a Eurosceptic Five-Star Movement one. But last week’s local elections showed that if the centre-right did coalesce, it might be a competitive force, adding yet more uncertainty to Italy’s political landscape. Berlusconi is still Italy’s last elected prime minister; four prime ministers later and 23 years after his first election, Italy has not written him off just yet.

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